| | Jackson Browne Pretender CD Jackson Browne Discography of CDs
(2 Customer Reviews)
Personnel includes: Jackson Browne (vocals, acoustic guitar); Fred Tackett (acoustic & electric guitars); Luis F. Damian (guitar, vijuella, background vocals); Waddy Wachtel (guitar); Roberto Gutierrez (guitaron, violin, background vocals); Arthur Gerst (harp, background vocals); Chuck Finley, Dick Hyde, Quitman Dennit (horns); Roy Bittan, Craig Doerge (piano); Mike Utley (organ); Bob Glaub, Chuck Rainey, Leland Sklar (bass); Russell Kunkel, Jeff Porcaro (drums); Gary Coleman (percussion); Rosemary Butler, Jon Landau (background vocals); Albert Lee, Jim Horn, Billy Payne, John David Souther. Recorded at Sunset Sound, Hollywood, California. Includes a poem by Pablo Neruda. Personnel: Jackson Browne (vocals, guitar, acoustic guitar, piano, keyboards); Lowell George (vocals, guitar, slide guitar); Roberto Gutierrez (vocals, guitar, guitarron, violin, background vocals); Luis Damian (vocals, guitar, background vocals); David Crosby, Don Henley, Graham Nash, J.D. Souther, Jon Landau, Rosemary Butler, Bonnie Raitt (vocals); Fred Tackett (guitar, acoustic guitar, electric guitar); Albert Lee (guitar, electric guitar); David Lindley (guitar, slide guitar, steel guitar, lap steel guitar, violin, fiddle); John Hall (guitar); Arthur Gerst (harp, background vocals); David Campbell (viola); John Haeny (recorder); Chuck Findley, Richard Hyde, David Hyde, Jim Horn, Chuck Finley, Quitman Dennis (horns); Bill Payne (piano, organ, keyboards); Craig Doerge (piano, keyboards); Roy Bittan (piano); Mike Utley (organ, keyboards); Jim Gordon (organ, drums); Jeff Porcaro, Russ Kunkel (drums); Gary Coleman (percussion). Audio Mixers: Greg Ladanyi; Val Garay. Recording information: Sunset sound (1976); Sunset Sound Factory, Los Angeles, CA (1976). Photographers: Howard Burke; Jackson Browne. Unknown Contributor Roles: Arthur Gerst; Luis Damian. Arrangers: David Campbell ; Arthur Gerst; Jim Horn. On The Pretender, Jackson Browne took a step back from the precipice so well defined on his first three albums, but doing so didn't seem to make him feel any better. Employing a real producer, Jon Landau, for the first time, Browne made what sounded like a real contemporary rock record, but this made his songs less effective; the ersatz Mexican arrangement of "Linda Paloma" and the bouncy second half of "Daddy's Tune," with its horn charts and guitar solo, undercut the lyrics. The man who had delved so deeply into life's abyss on his earlier albums was in search of escape this time around, whether by crying ("Here Come Those Tears Again"), sleeping ("Sleep's Dark and Silent Gate"), or making peace with estranged love ones ("The Only Child," "Daddy's Tune"). None of it worked, however, and when Browne came to the final track -- traditionally the place on his albums where he summed up his current philosophical stance -- he delivered "The Pretender," a cynical, sarcastic treatise on moneygrubbing and the shallow life of the suburbs. Primarily inner-directed, the song's defeatist tone demands rejection, but it is also a quintessential statement of its time, the post-Watergate '70s; dire as that might be, you had to admire that kind of honesty, even as it made you wince. ~ William Ruhlmann Jackson Browne was one of the leading singer/songwriters of the '70s, and THE PRETENDER, his fourth album, under the supervision of Bruce Springsteen's producer, Jon Landau, remains his definitive '70s record. Part of the cadre of L.A. musicians that included the Eagles, Crosby, Stills & Nash, Joni Mitchell and Linda Ronstadt, Browne stood out as the spokesman for baby boomer angst. This low-key rocker sings in a plaintive tone, concentrating more on lyrics than melody. But his music is complicated and off the beaten-path of standard folk-rock songwriting, sometimes sounding like the soulful Van Morrison, especially on "Your Bright Baby Blues." The title track is a scornful indictment of middle-class America, while "Linda Paloma," led by a Latin beat a Jackson Browne Pretender Songs Purchase Pretender CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Jackson Browne Running On Empty CD (1977)
Pretender
$6.05
| | Jackson Browne Late For The Sky CD (1974)
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$9.15
| | Jackson Browne (Saturate Before Using) CD (1972)
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$9.05
| | Jackson Browne For Everyman CD (1973)
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$9.05
| | VH1 Presents The Corrs Live In Dublin CD (2002)
Pretender
$6.39 The Corrs: Jim Corr (vocals, guitar, keyboards); Sharon Corr (vocals, violin); Andrea Corr (vocals, tin whistle); Caroline Corr (vocals, drums, bodhran, ...
| | Queen Greatest Hits III CD (2000)
Pretender
$12.95 Feat:Queen W/ Elton John,David Bowie,George Michael, Etc.
Queen: Freddie Mercury, Brian May, Roger Taylor, John Deacon. Additional personnel includes: David Bowie, George Michael, Elton John, Wyclef Jean, Ras Michael, Free, Montserrat Caballe (vocals). Producers include: Queen, David Bowie, David Richards, Mike Moran, Mack. Additional personnel includes: George Michael, David Bowie, Montserrat Caballe, Elton John. Audio Remixers: Justin Shirley-Smith; Wyclef Jean. Liner Note Authors: Neal Preston; Andy Davis . Photographers: Peter Hince; Suzi Gibbons; Richard Gray ; Simon Fowler. Pay attention, because this gets tricky. Very tricky. The first Queen Greatest Hits released in America was a 14-track LP that hit the stores in 1981. Several years later, CDs overtook LPs as the leading format of recorded music, but due to various legal reasons, Queen's catalog didn't hit CD until 1991, and soon, CD compilations started to appear in bewildering configurations. In the U.K., where Queen remained on the charts throughout the '80s, a sequel to that 1981 Greatest Hits was released in 1991, chronicling such hits as "Under Pressure," "I Want to Break Free," and "Radio Ga Ga." In the U.S., Queen stopped having Top 40 hits after "Radio Ga Ga," so Greatest Hits, Vol. 2 was filled with music largely unfamiliar to the American listener. Hollywood, the American label with the rights to the reissues, thus decided to slightly reconfigure that U.K. Greatest Hits, Vol. 2 by dropping a few tracks and substituting such radio staples as "Tie Your Mother Down" and "Stone Cold Crazy," along with the hits "Under Pressure" and "Bohemian Rhapsody," which was a current hit in 1992 thanks to its exposure in the hit film Wayne's World. This reconfigured Greatest Hits, Vol. 2 was called Classic Queen and it was a Top Ten hit, but surely listeners expecting Queen songs a little more classic than "Headlong" and "I'm Going Slightly Mad" were disappointed that, say, "We Will Rock You" and "Another One Bites the Dust" weren't on this new CD. So, six months after the March 1992 release of Classic Queen, ...
| | Best Of The Partisans CD (2000) (Import) Canada
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$17.69 Liner Note Author: Mark Brennan .
| | Louisiana Red Driftin' CD (2001)
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$13.39 It’s long been said that you have to live the blues in order to play them. Whether you believe in this notion or not, it would be difficult to argue that anyone performing on the blues scene today has felt the blues more than Louisiana Red. Born Iverson Minter in Bessemer, Alabama on June 23, 1932, Red has overcome adversity at virtually every step of his life. His songs are powerful and passionate and reflect both his tragic childhood and life struggles. His life sadly began with the death of his mother to pneumonia when Red was only seven days old. When he was five years old the KKK murdered his Father. At that point he was shuffled between family members where he was abused physically and psychologically. He also spent two years in an orphanage, where he suffered further abuse. His solace throughout these difficult times was music. Making his first instrument at age nine out of an old cigar box and rubber bands, he was encouraged greatly by his grandfather, a self-taught bottleneck guitarist who gave Red his first real guitar – an old Kay acoustic that he still has in his possession. While living in Pittsburgh he became a protégé of local legend Crit Walters, and even received encouragement from John Lee “Sonny Boy” Williamson, who gave Red a Hohner Old Standby harmonica. At the age of sixteen, he lied about his age and joined the army, serving in Korea. After his honorable discharge, and a brief stint in New Jersey, he found himself in Chicago where he recorded a handful of tracks for the Checker label, a subsidiary of Chess Records, featuring Little Walter on harmonica and Muddy Waters assisting on guitar. This allowed him to hit the thriving Southside blues joints where he wound up playing with Jimmy Rogers, Otis Spann, and Baby Face Leroy, learning from them, and helping to develop their styles. Perhaps his greatest inspiration, however, came when he moved to Detroit and found himself playing with John Lee Hooker, the final piece of the puzzle that would make up Red’s style. In recent years Red ...
| | Droogs Atomic Garage CD (1996)
Pretender
$16.45 Neither obscurity (nor folding labels like PVC), nor change in musical fashion, nor gloom of night (or the club scene) can alter L.A.'s Droogs from their appointed rounds: It is their solemn duty to record warped, tough-sounding, barbed-wire psychedelic rock and boppin' bubblegum pop undercut by Roger Clay's startling, spacy, scraped-fuzz guitar. (Got news for Jesus & Mary Chain, Spaceman 3, and Flying Saucer Attack devotees: Droogs were at this while the Reid brothers and company were in grade school, going back to a string of lo-fi singles decades ago before that term existed -- see the 1987 German retrospective Anthology.) When you hear singer Ric Albin, you still hear the MC5, the Yardbirds, Howlin' Wolf, the Seeds, the Kingsmen, Pebbles/Nuggets groups, and everyone else whose every lyric meant no-nonsense (yet cool) business. And like the Wipers, Droogs keep the songs simple and repetitive, so that Clay (like Greg Sage) can blow your mind bending his strings every which way. Wild, wild, wild and great! Feel your mind ...
| | Dance Number 1'S CD (2007) Special Edition
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$10.59
| | Essential 60'S CDs (2007) (Import) Import; Boxed Set
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$27.59
| | Pamela Bruner Till We Meet Again-Songs Of Celtic Women CD (2008)
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$18.99
| | Average White Band Warmer Communications CD (1978) Bonus Tracks
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$9.89 Average White Band: Hamish Stuart (vocals, guitar, bass), Alan Gorrie (vocals, bass, guitar), Onnie McIntyre (guitar, background vocals), Malcolm "Molly" Duncan (tenor & soprano saxophones), Roger Ball (piano, keyboards, synthesizer, alto saxophone), Alan Gorrie (bass, vocals), Steve Ferrone (drums, percussion). Additional personnel: Jim Mullen (guitar), Dick Morrisey, Klaus Doldinger (tenor saxophone), Jaroslav Jakubovic (soprano & baritone saxophones), Lew Delgatto (baritone saxophone, flute), Don Ellis, Gilman Rathel (trumpet), Tom Malone, Barry Rogers, Alan Kaplan (trombone), Richard Tee (electric piano), Ray Baretto (congas, percussion), Rubens Bassini, Raphael Cruz, Sammy Figueroa (percussion). Includes liner notes by A. Scott Galloway. WARMER COMMUNICATIONS...AND MORE includes live bonus material from the Montreaux Jazz Festival. Arif Marden-produced WARMER COMMUNICATIONS didn't need a major single to sell at least half a million copies in the United States, where fans were willing the buy the record regardless of how much radio airplay it received. In fact, fans found that they could easily play this album from start to finish without ever feeling disappointed. Warmer Communications gets off to an impressive start with ...
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